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New course for Middletown’s downtown

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Vivian Moon View Drop Down
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    Posted: Feb 18 2016 at 8:07pm

Updated: 4:34 p.m. Thursday, Feb. 18, 2016 | Posted: 4:31 p.m. Thursday, Feb. 18, 2016

New course for Middletown’s downtown considered

By Mike Rutledge

Staff Writer

MIDDLETOWN 

What course should be charted for Middletown’s downtown? Should it be branded as an arts area? A historic downtown? Maybe both, but in different parts of the downtown? Or perhaps something else?

That will be a main focus of a downtown master plan that Downtown Middletown Inc. is poised to launch in coming weeks. The organization next week will announce which consulting firm it will hire to formulate the plan.

“There will be a lot of public feedback,” promises Downtown Middletown Inc. Executive Director Mallory Greenham.

A lot of feedback already has been collected through the “What If Middletown?” visioning process now underway, which is evaluating community sentiment for how the entire city should move forward, Greenham notes.

But the public input sought for the downtown master plan “will be much more specific, direct questions about downtown Middletown: Do you see it as a historic downtown? Do you see it as an arts-district downtown? Do you see it more urban? Do you not even care about the historic architecture?”

“Those are the things that we want to find out from the public,” Greenham said.

The plan will envision what the downtown’s street lights will look like: Modern? Historic? Artistic?

“That is going to come out through their research,” Greenham said. “If it comes out that we see ourselves as more of an arts district, then maybe they’re a little bit more artistic, and maybe more modern. If we really feel that the core of our essence here in downtown Middletown is that we are a historic district, then they might be more historically appropriate for the age.”

“The light poles are kind of how this all got started,” Greenham said. “We realized that there’s a lot of interest to put banners and decorations on our poles.”

But the current poles are deteriorating, and the materials they’re made from would cause a safety issue to retrofit them to hold banners and decorations, Greenham said.

“They’re going to do public meetings and surveys,” she said.

Her organization still is negotiating terms with the consultant, but the price tag is expected to be in the $40,000 range, with half the funding coming from city government and the rest from other community funding sources, Greenham said. The plan should be finished this fall.

Lots of information wanted

“I kind-of think a downtown master plan is almost a basic requirement for any downtown district that’s looking to have a rebirth in revitalization,” Greenham said. “In a way, it was almost kind of shocking that we didn’t have a plan for our downtown district.”

“Without a plan, you don’t know where you’re going, so it’s good to have that,” said Mayor Larry Mulligan Jr. “And anytime we have people coming together to participate in it, it’s great to get broader input, because it can’t just be a few people on city council or the planning department — it needs to be a broader effort.”

While Downtown Middletown Inc. is leading the plan, city government plans to implement it as a guiding document, Mulligan said. So before departments at city hall take action on street lights, signs or other matters downtown, they will look to its recommendations.

City Manager Doug Adkins recently announced the goal that by 2020 of seeing the downtown “at least 70 percent full, instead of the 70 percent empty it is now,” and expressed hope a new downtown plan can foster development.

Here’s some other help the plan should provide for downtown, which has been experiencing a gradual renaissance in recent years, with numerous shops sprouting flags out front announcing they’re “open”:

*Suggestions for ways to improve signs that direct people to downtown locations;

·                       A plan for what sidewalks, flower planters, garbage cans and benches should look like;

·                       Ways to improve or better use downtown greenspace areas;

·                       Examinations of improvements that can be made to all eight traffic gateways to downtown; and

·                       A look at the possibilities for housing downtown.

The plan also is intended to spark downtown development at specific sites, such as the warehouse row between downtown and the riverfront, and places like the Studio Theater.

What we hope to walk away with is a handful of clearly identified projects that we don’t necessarily have the investors for,” Greenham said. The plan should include the top investment opportunities, with research and market studies behind them “to say this is a sound investment.”

“They’ll also go through basically from University all the way down to the riverfront to identify development opportunities,” Greenham said. “This is an example: They may look at the Studio Theater, address the needs to bring that building back (with redevelopment), maybe suggest what might be the best use for that space, tie a dollar amount to it, and also possibly suggest investors for that building.”

The plan also will offer input on whether some one-way streets should be converted back to two-way.

“The traffic people at cities usually want to get traffic in and out as smoothly as possible,” Greenham said. “Downtown districts in the urban core really want to slow people down a little bit.”

Two advantages of slowing traffic: Vehicles wouldn’t drive as quickly past businesses that are interested in selling them things, and pedestrians don’t like to cross streets where the vehicles are moving too quickly.

Consultants will examine whether the downtown should be broken into separate districts.

“There’s a couple of groups — not my organization — one wanted to name it I think arts central district, and there’s another that wants to name it a historic downtown canal district,” she said. “What we’re trying to determine from this plan are, ‘Do we even need to district? If we did district, what would be the proper names? Where would those boundaries be?’

“The people that were talking about districting only wanted to do a couple blocks, not addressing the entire downtown,” Greenham said. “It may be something that they come back and say, ‘No, don’t district,’ or ‘District.’ But that’s something we’re trying to gather.”

If you want to receive emails inviting your feedback as the plan is developed, you can sign up atwww.downtownmiddletown.org.

Why care about downtown’s future?

Mica Glaser, one of three owners of the Windamere Event Venue and Art Gallery, which opened in October at 2 S. Main St., hopes the plan will continue downtown improvements.

“My main hope is that everything that has been in the works comes under one umbrella so it’s a more cohesive plan, and it’s not a variety of people trying to do different things,” Glaser said. “Just so everybody has the clear vision of what can be done, and where it can go, because I think Middletown’s downtown has a lot of potential in it, and it just needs to be more focused, so people can see a bigger impact, and people can see things changing.

“I think if they see a lot of progress, then it will start changing their attitude on what can happen for the rest of the town,” said Glaser, whose reception facility already has 32 events booked into 2017.

She lives near Dayton and sees a lot of potential in the downtown.

“Otherwise, we wouldn’t have opened our business down here — so from the outside, we see a lot of great things in Middletown. Unfortunately, the people who live here all don’t have that same outlook,” Glaser said.

Glaser would love to see a hotel open in the downtown.

“I need hotel rooms. I will shout that from the top of my building,” she said. “I have a lot of weddings coming in that are 150-225 people, and even if they’re not out-of-town, they still don’t want to drive home that night, possibly, and the possibility of a downtown hotel would be great, because otherwise, all that business will be pushed up by the highway, and then these businesses down here don’t benefit from that.”

Roger Daniel, who owns the former Rogers Jewelers headquarters building at 1050 Central Ave. and created two retail spaces inside, including Flores Leather Works, which makes handcrafted leather products, is bullish on the area.

“I think the downtown’s come a long way in, say, the last three or four years,” Daniel said. “There’s a number of businesses that are expected to start up here in the next five to six months, and I think the downtown plan just might get people a little more excited about downtown.”

He hopes the plan will encourage residential development.

“In my opinion, that’s the thing that’s needed most downtown. You need people living downtown,” Daniel said. “Part of urban living is to walk out your door, walk down the street, get a coffee, maybe get an alcoholic beverage or window-shop, go to a bookstore.”

Why should non-downtown residents care?

Greenham says downtown improvements will not happen at the expense of other parts of town. In fact, an improved downtown can provide new tax revenues that help the city as a whole, she said.

“Downtown Middletown is the face of Middletown, whether they (critics of downtown development efforts) like it or not,” Greenham said. “Whether they think the East End is a better representation, when visitors or travelers want to find out who Middletown is, they come to downtown Middletown,” Greenham said. “They should all care — this is the living room of our community.”

Here’s why Middletown residents who don’t live downtown should care about the future of the city’s core, she says: “We have a giant district full of buildings that are vacant — they’re not contributing to property taxes, sales taxes, and they look bad on our community.

“We feel that if we can turn this around, make it a walkable, thriving urban-core environment, that only means more money to schools, increased property values and increased quality of life,” Greenham said.


Five Middletown Studies

Here are five studies being conducted in Middletown, and the focus of each:

·                       Middletown Master Plan — Conducted by McBride Dale Clarion — an overarching plan for the entire city of Middletown that will tie together all the other related city plans. It will consider future land-use possibilities, identify key topics that should make up the city’s “planning agenda,” and evaluate priority development sites.

·                       Community Visioning — Handled by Middletown Moving Forward Inc. and the Community Building Institute — will identify neighborhood and economic issues, create a vision statement that “clearly defines Middletown’s desired future,” and recommend solutions and strategies to achieve them.

·                       Downtown Master Plan — A project of Downtown Middletown Inc. and a consultant to be named next week — unlike the Middletown Master Plan, this plan will focus on downtown and how it connects with other parts of the city. It will evaluate existing conditions, recommend a comprehensive streetscape design and preferred architectural styles for the downtown, suggest future land-use patterns, evaluate market demands for the downtown, offer information about prime sites for developments that development companies can use, and suggest funding strategies to achieve the plan’s aims.

·                       Housing Study — Handled by Danter Group — a comprehensive housing study for the entire city that City Manager Doug Adkins has said he hopes “will tell us what kind of housing we need in Middletown, to start balancing our housing stock and get our property values up.” It will evaluate demand for housing in the city at various price points, evaluate housing trends and growth projections, and will give special consideration to studying housing in the downtown.

·                       Bicycle/Pedestrian Plan — Will evaluate existing conditions, analyze where new bike/pedestrian connections should be made, prioritize the potential projects, and determine the types of paths that should be built, and what amenities the paths should have.

The people creating the five plans “are all working together — all these plans, and all these consultants,” says Mallory Greenham, executive director of Downtown Middletown Inc. “We’re not duplicating efforts, but it’s real easy to get confused (about why there are so many plans)…. They just happen to be happening at the same time.”

Source: City of Middletown and Journal-News research

 

 

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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote VietVet Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: Feb 19 2016 at 6:02am
Now wait a minute. All these years the downtown supporters have been telling us what the downtown will be by establishing an artzy/cultural mecca complete with arts studios, bistros, and the attempt to establish a professional clientele down there.

All of a sudden, they want the community's input on what the theme should be in their precious downtown area? With this "new course" for the downtown title, are they finally admitting that, perhaps, they have been wrong all these years and that the current thinking of culture and arts may not work in a blue collar city? Could it be that the downtown supporters have finally come to the conclusion that spending millions for years to achieve the little they have accomplished is just flat out not a good return on investment? Could it be that they are willing to listen to some good old common sense and are open to other ideas that support the majority of the community and their interests?

Are they willing to change direction even if what they hear is not on their agenda as to what the downtown should be? More importantly, will they change it after they hear something different from the people outside their circle?

It is a start. Better than the close-minded stubborn attitude so far. I hope they listen to the people who may think differently than they do. It would be refreshing.
I'm so proud of my hometown and what it has become. Recall 'em all. Let's start over.
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Cooper Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: Feb 19 2016 at 9:18am
I believe it was Dean or another poster had made valid points the Forbes article done in 2008 had made no reference to downtown. As Joan Rivers would say, 'can we talk.' The activity downtown is all for the residents on Main Street. Its for property values,  legacy, demand. 

If you think your input it choosing a colonial lamp or a contemporary one is important enough to have meaning, attend a meeting. The city disappeared with the arrival of the interstate and the elimination of canal boats. All the money being used for a few citizens on Main Street taken away from other neighborhoods isn't right. 

The local citizen and their neighbors should grab the bull by the horn. Get a contractor to patch bad spots, put sealer in cracks. Form neighborhood watch groups and keep an eye on your houses. Add what you can to your neighborhood and make no reliance or wait for the city to do anything for your neighborhood benefit.

Main Street has the purse of city hall. Trying to re-create the heart of a city when canal boats were the main mode of transportation and horse and buggy is impractical. Maybe a good addition down there would be a mule and plow shop to provide the means to harvest the annual crops. 
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Mike_Presta Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: Feb 19 2016 at 4:53pm
The "new" plan will be just like the old plan. Every "new" plan for the last umpteen years always has been, and they always will be until there is a complete change at city hall.

The only difference is some years the "new" plan is "arts and antiques" while other years the "new" plan is "antiques and arts"!!!
“Mulligan said he ... doesn’t believe they necessarily make the return on investment necessary to keep funding them.” …The Middletown Journal, January 30, 2012
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Cooper Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: Feb 19 2016 at 5:30pm
Great minds think alike. The number of plans that aren't plans, is amazing in the city of Middletown. Its really astounding how many plans there have been, and then revisions to the plans. And the problem is the plans deviate in many cases from one another, and don't give details. Doug Adkins formula is just that. It says the revenue goal is $ 4 Mm and  breaks down a sample of income tax and property tax, but stops there. Mirage, facade, illusion, these plans are based on such. They forget the SWOT and the money needed to make it happen. This city went down when Armco's top guys left to move to New Jersey. Just no heavy hitters around that the city allows to get involved, instead relying on all hat, no cattle minds. The outcome is plans, plans, plans, with no execution and outcome.    
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Vivian Moon Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: Feb 20 2016 at 10:04am
Hmmm...When is Historic not Historic? Answer, when you live in Middletown...mercy

Several years on this blog we discussed that City Hall and Marty Kohler were forcing businesses in the downtown area to repair their property using Historic Law...even though the area was NOT in the Historic District.
Sooo are they now changing this downtown city hall historic law for buildings outside the Historic District?
Their DOWNTOWN DREAM has failed because City Hall has had a strangle hold on this area for years that has restricted the natural growth of this area.
No Leadership...No vision...No plan...= Failure


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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote 409 Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: Feb 23 2016 at 5:07pm
MJ:
See who was picked to develop Middletown’s downtown master plan

By Mike Rutledge
Staff Writer
MIDDLETOWN —
Downtown Middletown Inc. has chosen planning and architecture consultants OHM Advisors to create a downtown master plan that will determine how the city’s core should brand itself, and what Middletown people want it to look and feel like in coming years.

DMI Executive Director Mallory Greenham, who announced the hiring, said people from the community who met with three consulting firms filled out surveys afterward, and “the survey results that came in were overwhelmingly in support of OHM.”

“The presentation that they gave, they were knowledgeable about Middletown — I think that’s why they rose to the top,” Greenham said. “They had taken a tour, they had done their homework, they are excited to do it, and we’re excited to work with them.”

The master plan will look at many aspects of the downtown, and will cost about $40,000, with half coming from city government and the rest from community sources.

OHM has 11 locations in Michigan, Ohio and Tennessee, including Columbus, where the two consultants who will handle the Middletown work are based.

The company has won rave reviews from Sandra Hull, executive director of Main Street Wooster, Ohio’s longest continuously operating program of its type. OHM recently created for the city of Wooster a 10-year update of the community’s comprehensive plan. During that work, citizens strongly called for the continued redevelopment of the city’s downtown, Hull said.

“As a result of that, the city then decided that they needed a Downtown Wooster Strategic Plan for the next five years,” which recently was finished, Hull said. “They gave a number of concepts that we are literally starting this year, and it’s most exciting.”

What makes OHM stand out among consulting firms is “their planning and their consulting is unique to each community, and they really care about each community,” Hull said. “They treat it with the respect, and also the respect of your particular resources that you have (as a community).”

“I think they (Middletown people) will find that it’s a very positive experience,” Hull said.

Greenham has said Middletown citizens will be invited to give plenty of input between when the work begins in coming weeks and October, when officials hope it will be finished. To receive emails inviting your feedback as the plan is developed, sign up at www.downtownmiddletown.org.

Vice Mayor Dora Bronston was among those who listened to presentations from the three consulting firms, and, “that was my choice, also,” she said. “Their presentation was very impressive. Also, I looked at the booklets that were available for us to review of previous work they had done, and from what I saw, I enjoyed their train of thought, the process by which the city would be able to actually change.”

Bronston was impressed that the consultants were “not there to give us answers, but they stimulated a lot of thought.” She also likes that the company will be most interested in learning what Middletown people think the future of the downtown should be.

“I want to see in the people’s minds, what do they want downtown to look like?” Bronston said. “Do you want to see something more modern? Do you want to retain some form of traditional setting downtown? I’m anxious to see what the people see.”

In Wooster, “We have a downtown that we have been developing for over 29 years, and this plan actually is not starting over, it’s just celebrating the evolvement that we’ve had,” Hull said. “We’re going to be redoing some of the streetscape, and bringing the maintenance of that up to speed (among several other projects). OHM’s Wooster study also predicted a demand for 200 downtown housing units during the next five years, she added.



Seven new downtown businesses in ‘15, seven more announced for ‘16

Seven businesses opened their doors in downtown Middletown during 2015, and seven more already have announced plans to open this year, Downtown Middletown Inc. Executive Director Mallory Greenham announced Tuesday during her organization’s annual meeting.

*The seven that opened last year were Triple Moon Coffee Company, Emage Signs & Graphics, Society, Mockingbirds, Flores Leather Works, Savorie Handcrafted Delights, and Gallery on Clinton.

*The seven already announced for this year are By the Slice pizza, Liberty Spirits, Central Tap & Pint, Lester’s Rock N Roll Shop, D&D Dog Grooming, Central Tattoo, and Soul Craft Studios.
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote VietVet Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: Feb 23 2016 at 8:23pm
I thought the downtown supporters KNEW what they wanted for their downtown. If they are now admitting they need some help in their idea planning,they certainly wasted decades and millions of dollars being undecided. More money down the rathole. 20 thousand more from the taxpayers and 20 grand more for yet another consulting/study/investigation/moneywaster....call it what you want, to produce yet another stack of papers that no one will ever act upon. Look at the boondoggle trips taken by city leaders to where, Kentucky and S. Carolina years ago......and, pray tell, what has that produced? Some glorified talk the PAC idea and some fond memories with little else of any substance. For such an impressive trip. I notice no one ever talks about any benefits anymore from those trips. Kinda out of sight, out of mind and forgotten about now aren't they. Big news at the time, right?

Another "grasping at straws" attempt to come up with something......anything, that will resemble some success in the money pit/black hole called downtown.

News tip city leaders and downtown people.....

FORGET ABOUT YOUR DAM DOWNTOWN UNTIL THE OTHER, MORE IMPORTANT BASICS ARE MET IN THIS CITY. Your dam downtown comes much later when the necessities have been taken care of. Bake the cake first. Add the downtown icing after the cake is made. Get the city in order before you take on your downtown. It is not needed now in the grand scheme of things as to importance and hardly a first priority for the city. Common sense actually works. Try it. You may like it once you understand it.....if you are able.
I'm so proud of my hometown and what it has become. Recall 'em all. Let's start over.
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